Counter-Reformation
I Need A Tudor
Thirty Years' War
Protestant Beliefs and Practices
Random Stuff
100

City in Italy where Catholic leaders met over 18 years to respond to charges by Protestants that the Catholic Church had lost its way.

What is Trent (or Trento)?

100

Youngest of Henry VIII's children, he ruled for six years until dying at the age of sixteen. While alive, he tried to keep his father's new Protestant church strong. 

Who is Edward VI?

100

This region in the modern-day Czech Republic is where the Thirty Years' War began. It involved the defenestration of a Catholic official from a third-story window.

What is Bohemia?

100

Involving words like Transubstantiation and Consubstantiation, this part of Catholic and Protestant worship services was a very controversial part of the Reformation. 

What is the Eucharist, Communion, or Lord's Supper?

100

A massacre at this location in northeastern France is seen as the beginning of the French Wars of Religion (1562-1598). 

What is Vassy?

200

Another name for the Society of Jesus, this Catholic order's purpose is to spread the message of the church around the world. 

They got their start during the Counter-Reformation.

Who are the Jesuits?

200

Oldest of Henry VIII's children, she tried to force England back to Catholicism in a "bloody" way.

Who is Mary I?

200

While official numbers are hard to come by, this is the estimated number of deaths during the Thirty Years' War. 

What is eight million?

200

This is the name for Protestant reformers who believed in an interdependent relationship between government and church. 

Who are magesterial reformers?

200

This Latin phrase, meaning "whose realm, their religion", was used in the Peace of Augsburg. 

What is cuius regio, eius religio?

300

This church tribunal was used to force confessions out of individuals accused of committing heresy against the Catholic Church.

What is the Inquisition?

300

Second of Henry VIII's children, she ensured that England would remain a Protestant nation during her forty-five year reign. 

Who is Elizabeth I?

300

Controlled by the powerful Habsburg family, this nation was a big loser of the Thirty Years' War.

What is Spain or Holy Roman Empire?

300

Ulrich Zwingli and Martin Luther both believed in ________ ________, which is another way of saying priests could have wives and children. 

What is clerical marriage?

300

The name for French Calvinists. They were persecuted in France, with many moving to other countries (including eventually Canada and the U.S.).

Who are Hugenots?

400

This pope was the one who called for a ecumenical council of Catholic leaders to reclaim Christianity from the Protestants.

Who is Paul III?

400
This is the name for England's largest Protestant church. It was begun by Henry VIII in the 1530s. Every English monarch must also promise to be part of the church. 

What is the Church of England (Anglican Church)?

400

The big winner of the Thirty Years' War, this country was Catholic yet fought much of the war against other Catholic countries. 

What is France?

400

A controversial part of John Calvin's theology, this is the belief that God has already determined who will go to heaven or hell.

What is predestination?

400

Named King of France in 1589, he was successful in ending the French Wars of Religion.

Unfortunately, he was assassinated by a French Catholic in 1610.

Who is Henry IV?

500

While it never went totally "away", the buying and selling of __________ lost its importance after the mid-1500s.

What are indulgences?

500

This is the number of wives Henry VIII had during his lifetime. 

What is six?

500

This was the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire at the beginning of Thirty Years' War. 

Who is Ferdinand II?

500

William Tyndale apparently promoted this belief, in which a country's monarch should have more power than the pope. 

What is caesaropapism?

500

This law ended the French Wars of Religion. It proclaimed Catholicism as the official religion/domination of France while allowing French Protestants the right to worship freely. 

What is the Edict of Nantes?

M
e
n
u